Michael Kors Soars, Abercrombie Ain't As Cool As You Think, and the Econ News You Should Know for Your Wall Street Week in Review

There's no better way to kick off June than with some beach-side cervezas, a fresh new fluorescent bathing suit, and a two-minute rundown of what moved Wall Street to new records. The S&P 500 reached new all-time highs on a big, holiday-shortened four-day week.

1. Stock market winner of the week ...We ourselves are not exactly trend-setters when it comes to fashion, but it doesn't take a Diane Von Furstenberg to figure out that Michael Kors (NYSE: KORS) is all over Madison Avenue and Wall Street. The designer of luxury handbags for women released its first quarter earnings last week, revealing a 54.6% rise in revenue from the same period last year, reaching a hot $917.5 million in quarterly revenue.

For those of you keeping score, the revenue figures over the first three months of 2014 are well over the $816 million analysts expected. And here's why: global demand. Mike has already cut the red tape to open over 100 stores worldwide in just the past few months. And that's to satisfy the 63% rise in European sales over the past year.

But what really got investors giddy were the company's good lookin' projections. Through the full year of fiscal 2015, Kors is projecting over 31% year-over-year revenue growth, which would take the company through its 33rd straight quarter of positive revenue gains. Now that's worth tossing a big gold label on.

2. ... And stock market loser

After reporting earnings last week, Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF) stock popped 5.8%. Investors were pumped by the fact that $822 million in quarterly revenue from the teen-focused retailer beat the lowly $804.5 million the analysts had been projecting.

So why are we considering Abercrombie to be a loser? It's not just because we're tired of their aggressively striped polo shirts with jumbo collars or the fact that they snubbed us from modeling in their magazine. It's because those "analyst-beating" revenues were still 2% lower than during the same period over last year. Plus, Abercrombie also suffered a $13 million net loss over the last three months.

The bottom line for Abercrombie is that teens aren't into their look anymore. Abercrombie's own brand stores saw a 1% drop in sales on the quarter, while sales plummeted 7% at their Hollister brand stores. And no one even knows what they plan to do with their failing underwear brand, Gilly Hicks.

3. European stocks highest since '08

Treat yourself to a double-packed Nutella crepe: The Stoxx Europe 600, an index that measures the value of 600 major European stocks, reached its highest level in six years. Greece may have ratified its last bailout package in 2012 and Portugal made a "clean exit" from its bailout last month, but the debt crisis that crushed stocks across the pond in 2011 ain't over -- unemployment remains at depression levels in Spain and Greece. So what were European investors celebrating? The profits their companies are making in other markets, like the U.S. and China.

4. U.S. GDP surprisingly contracted 1%We know you tossed on extra North Face layers this past winter, but Wall Street didn't think the weather was this bad: U.S. GDP actually contracted at a 1% annualized rate in the first three months of 2014, compared with the initially small 0.1% growth analysts estimated. Consumers stayed home and weren't consuming, so companies held back from producing and investing in machinery and equipment. Investors hope the second quarter will return to normal so GDP can reach the 3%-plus per year GDP growth that reduces unemployment and lifts wages.

Your credit card may soon be completely worthlessThe plastic in your wallet is about to go the way of the typewriter, the VCR, and the 8-track tape player. When it does, a handful of investors could stand to get very rich. You can join them -- but you must act now. An eye-opening new presentation reveals the full story on why your credit card is about to be worthless -- and highlights one little-known company sitting at the epicenter of an earth-shaking movement that could hand early investors the kind of profits we haven't seen since the dot-com days. Click here to watch this stunning video.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment icon found on every comment.